Well, I was just kind of watching this one but think I need to jump in here.
There are the old BLRs (originals amd model 81s) that have a standard hammer like a Winchester or Marlin. Pull it back to half #### and it is "On safe." Pull it back all the way and it is cocked and ready to go. If the hammer is against the firing pin, a jolt can fire the cartridge, and this is inherently UNSAFE. Once the rifle has a round chambered, it should be put at half-####.
The new Model "Lightning" have a fold down hammer. It has been a while since I had one of these in my hands and I do not recall how that worked. It sounds like this is what gunrunner 100 is talking about. In my mind's eye it is correct that you pull it back to half-####, then push it forward against the back of the firing pin, but it will NOT fire. This is a good thing, as the half-#### on the older style rifles allows pine needles, dirt, ice, etc to get into the action. In fact I lost a deer one time because snow had fallen into my rifle between the hammer and the FP, and froze around the back of the FP, so even when I pulled the trigger the hammer did not move the FP, it was frozen there!!! That deer did not hear a "click" it heard a "WTF IS WRONG WITH THIS F***ING GUN????"
Monty, I understand what you are saying, but no not agree that it is a good idea. Getting ready to shoot an animal is not the time to be fiddling around and pulling the trigger before a shot, in my view.
And finally, in all the deer I have shot with my BLR, I never had one spook when I pulled back the hammer, because I only pull it back immediately before I fire. They might hear a BOOM but they don't hear a click......
Free advice, worth what you paid for it.....
Doug